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Related: About this forumDeath Squad Revelations and the New Police in Honduras
Death Squad Revelations and the New Police in Honduras
Wednesday, 06 July 2016 00:00
By Annie Bird, CIP Americas Program | News Analysis
On June 21, 2015 the London-based Guardian newspaper published an article describing the testimony of a soldier who says he deserted the army after his unit was given an order to kill activists whose names appeared on two lists. He reported seeing one list given to his Military Police unit that formed part of the Xatruch task force, and a second for a Military Police unit that formed part of the National Force of Interinstitutional Security (FUSINA) task force. The second contained the name of Lenca indigenous leader Berta Caceres, murdered on March 3, 2016.
On June 22 Honduran Defense Minister Samuel Reyes published a response to the Guardian article, claiming that the Military Police did not have a seventh battalion, that the FBI had not trained military forces in Honduras and that the TESON (Troops Specialized in Jungle and Nocturnal Operations) training course did not have US military trainers.
However, the Honduran military has reported to local press that the Military Police is in the process of creating a series of ten battalions, each with slightly under 500 soldiers. In December 2014 the military reported that the fifth and sixth battalions had graduated, and by January 2016 it reported that there were 4,000 active Military Police, making it clear at least eight battalions are in operation.
The Guardian article referred to reports of training by the FBI and other US agencies of the FUSINA joint task force in an activity Secretary Reyes himself announced in a press conference with US Embassy personnel on May 13, 2015, as reported by AFP and Honduran media.
More:
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/36710-death-squad-revelations-and-the-new-police-in-honduras
Good Reads:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1016163008
Judi Lynn
(160,542 posts)State Department Turns Blind Eye to Evidence of Honduran Militarys Activist Kill List
Alex Emmons
June 23 2016, 11:23 a.m.
State Department spokesperson John Kirby on Wednesday repeatedly denied that the government of Honduras kills its own citizens, saying more than a dozen times that he has not heard credible evidence of deaths ordered by the military. His comments came in the wake of a high-profile assassination of Honduran native-rights activist Berta Cáceres in March, and a report in the Guardian that a high-level deserter from the Honduran army said he is 100 percent certain that Berta Cáceres was killed by the (Honduran) army.
The deserter explained that Cáceress name and picture appeared on a kill list including dozens of social and environmental activists, which had been distributed to two elite, U.S.-trained units. Since Hondurass right-wing regime seized power in a coup in 2009, media and human rights organizations have compiled overwhelming evidence of Honduran military and police violence.
Kirby said he was aware of media reports alleging the existence of a Honduran activist hit list, but noted that at this time, theres no specific, credible allegations of gross violations of human rights that exists in this or any other case involving the security forces that receive U.S. government assistance.
Kirbys comments were even at odds with the State Departments own human rights reports on Honduras, which for the last two years have referred to unlawful and arbitrary killings and other criminal activities by members of the security forces.
More:
https://theintercept.com/2016/06/23/state-department-turns-blind-eye-to-evidence-of-honduran-militarys-activist-kill-list/
Eugene
(61,900 posts)Source: The Guardian
State department review of Guardian allegations comes as a group
of Congress members renew call to suspend all US aid to Honduran
police and military
Ed Pilkington and Nina Lakhani
Friday 8 July 2016 11.35 BST
The US government is investigating allegations that a hitlist of activists was circulated to special forces units of the Honduran military with instructions to eliminate the targets, including Berta Cáceres, the celebrated environmental campaigner who was later gunned down in her home.
US officials have been in contact with counterparts in the Honduran government, as well as individuals and groups that monitor human rights in the country, to look into the allegations of a hitlist that were first reported in the Guardian.
The US ambassador to Honduras, James Nealon, told the Guardian: We take allegations of human rights abuses with the utmost seriousness. We always take immediate action to ensure the security and safety of people where there is a credible threat.
The state department review of the Guardian allegations comes as a group of prominent Congress members renew their call for the Obama administration to suspend all US aid to Honduran police and military units. Writing in the Guardian, the representatives, led by Hank Johnson of Georgia and John Conyers of Michigan, argue that the human rights record of the Honduran government is so woeful that there should be no funding by any US agency.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jul/08/honduras-military-hitlist-activists-us-investigation